Lawmaker says Trump is on ‘jihad’ against NJ by nixing $166M in benefits

TRENTON — President Donald Trump's announcement that he will send cost-sharing subsidies in the Affordable Care Act will affect more than 150,000 people in New Jersey, costing them more than $166 million in benefits.

About half of the nearly 300,000 people enrolled in insurance plans purchased from the federal exchange in New Jersey got the subsidies, according to data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

State Sen. Joe Vitale, D-Middlesex, who chairs the Senate health committee, says that since the cost-sharing subsidies from the government to insurers benefit poorer enrollees their elimination will hurt low-income populations.

"You have to ask why are you targeting low-income people?' Vitale said. "Is this a jihad against poor people?"

Rep. Leonard Lance, R-N.J. 7th District, said that after Trump's decision, lawmakers should pass a health care plan he has endorsed that would pay for the cost-sharing reduction program "through the congressional appropriations process and implements free-market policies to improve our health care system and lower medical and insurance costs for all."